142 L . r it. ..1._1_ JJ M (}1auoom The collarless overshirt, most adaptable of garments presents an entertaining fantasy from the art-nouveau period. . . sprawling with elaborate curly-cues and unnatural blossoms. The fabric is too-long-neglected cotton satin, with just the right amount of sleek surface. Blue/Orange/Yellow on White. Sizes 8 to 16. About eight dollars at good stores and college shops. THE VILLAGER INC. 1407 Broadway, New York 111 1 a 1. J I IL V , IlIi1rtJl" J .. situatIon changed; the fog blanket rose '; .... '\ a few feet, and the man In the sports .. ^' car was speeding past the creeping buses. N o\v and then, heavy fog starts a foot or so above the ground, and cats and I dogs have no trouble wIth it. _ When fog invades London, the smoke from factory chimneys, locomo- tives, and domestic fires, together with << the exhaust fumes from cars and trucks, cannot escape into the upper air, and :; the mixture P roduces bIzarre effects in f the color and character of the fog. In the last century, fogs were, generally speaking, even more bizarre, and w hat may be the first use of the term "pea soup" to describe the color of fog occurs in John Timbs' "Curiosities of London, Exhibiting the Most Rare and Remark- able Objects of Interest in the Metropo- f lis," published in 1855: "Sometimes it [ the fog] is of a bottle-green colour. . . . At other times it is of pea-soup yellow; i in the mIdst of which the street gas- : h lights appear like the pin-head lamps of old. The latter is the genuine 'London Fog.'" A somewhat later comment, by a veteran meteorologist, contained a t lot about other effects of the fog but was reticent about its color. "Han- som cabs and other vehicles mIght find themselves on the footways," the com- ment goes, "and in the general chaos one heard a good deal of good-hu- moured Cockney banter interspersed wIth more caustic gibes. A pedestrian could easily spend the evening looking for hIS house round the corner, and when he did get home would find the rooms half filled with the choking fog. . . . Sometimes, I would slink away to one of the great railway termini to reassure myself that there were limits to the be-sooted city beyond which lay the beauty of woods and hills. . . . I recall, too, how utterly gruesome it was on such days of Stygian gloom to see the Victorian funerals, with their plumed black steeds and craped mutes, stalking through the dismal streets." Then, as now, London fog could beoome so dense that one is tempted to belIeve the hy- perbole of the physician Andrew Wyn- ter, who wrote, in 1874, "If I were to jump up it would... support me in mid-air." Wynter was anything but f reticent about the color of the fog. j{> On.:.the..,.e \îc, . lori:da Keys: "By turns," he remarked, "we have ';'." _ i.'OR' ,'v " seen these fogs brown, green, orange, .. /.....,:./..d. . ^' ., . <,'*-"' ,;.' . ,,/," and slate colour, and when these h"'.t. h ;öt "'"_...... './. ,, ;!" ,', chameleon changes have been gone ..' ::. ,,'0 ..,"'::" . $ "J J!<>< through, a mixture of colours, which has <'. " ' , ="t ø' ''''''' been likened to a bad bruise, winds up :.- ..... the whole display." Though nowadays, with various smoke-control ordInances strictly enforced, and with diesel and NOVEMDER 1 I, I 9 b I \. ,$'., "* , , l ::f:... 3=: ! '- J:>\ ..} J l/ . Wishb,onEf '" . of ... \ means <,. : yo. t..happiness . 1..._ . .' n;oughout ..' :: '" theye;ar ,,( BenedIkt .' gold filled. pín... and earrings with cultured. :pea1'l$.c 3 80each fed. M)( ineL ,I., " MlReui t ..":DaUa,s :fi. ' stQn M :Û Cfð rs tG",ÙaUø.S::"Add...35Jt ma'ihng Xm! ,", jft-"\' ráp::&.Oc:::: ENSKO INC. 682 LEXINGTON AVE., N. Y. .,. 4 " 9 In tÌfe".,U.. ,$. A. .,..'But 'ìsles...ÀwaYiU"';" Fabulous . , '" v. :'0 '. ...: .,. I , . i-,. "' ^:'/ y* < , Truly .' place where nice people meet Enjoy Florida's warmest winter climate And our luxurious charming atmosphere